When will RNA get its AlphaFold moment?

Bohdan Schneider(Czech Academy of Sciences), Blake Sweeney(European Bioinformatics Institute), Alex Bateman(European Bioinformatics Institute), Jiri Cerny(Czech Academy of Sciences), Tomasz Żok(Poznań University of Technology), Marta Szachniuk(Institute of Bioorganic Chemistry, Polish Academy of Sciences)
Nucleic Acids Research
September 13, 2023
Cited by 122Open Access
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Abstract

The protein structure prediction problem has been solved for many types of proteins by AlphaFold. Recently, there has been considerable excitement to build off the success of AlphaFold and predict the 3D structures of RNAs. RNA prediction methods use a variety of techniques, from physics-based to machine learning approaches. We believe that there are challenges preventing the successful development of deep learning-based methods like AlphaFold for RNA in the short term. Broadly speaking, the challenges are the limited number of structures and alignments making data-hungry deep learning methods unlikely to succeed. Additionally, there are several issues with the existing structure and sequence data, as they are often of insufficient quality, highly biased and missing key information. Here, we discuss these challenges in detail and suggest some steps to remedy the situation. We believe that it is possible to create an accurate RNA structure prediction method, but it will require solving several data quality and volume issues, usage of data beyond simple sequence alignments, or the development of new less data-hungry machine learning methods.


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